Also from the Star Ledger: “Joseph G. DiVincenzo — whose father is Essex County Executive Joseph N. DiVincenzo — was hired in July as an education program development specialist by the New Jersey Department of Education at a salary of $92,528. DiVincenzo also works on the sales staff at Fairview Insurance, a politically-connected agency run by John F.X. Graham — one of the state’s most prominent Democratic donors. The company had more than $468,043.49 in public contracts in 2013, including with some school districts."
The N.J. Principals and Supervisors Association has no problem with the DOE’s set of options for high school graduation: passing scores on the PARCC, SAT scores over 400, or a portfolio assessment. The N.J. School Boards Association likes it too. NJEA, however, is nonplussed, describing the DOE's action as “a poorly-timed decision that has caused great confusion among students and educators.” (Maybe NJEA ought to give students and teachers a little more credit for comprehension. What's so hard?) Anyway, here's coverage from NJ Spotlight and Press of Atlantic City.
NJEA released a new teacher preparation proposal called “Taking Back the Profession.” See the Star Ledger, the Record, and NJ Spotlight.
Eleven N.J. high schools were named National Blue Ribbon Schools. Three are magnet career academies run by county vo-tech districts, two are private schools, and the rest are regular public schools, including one charter. See NJ Spotlight.
"The Jersey City teachers union is seeking a nearly 19 percent pay hike over the next three years, according to sources familiar with the union's offer. The increase would amount to $45 million over the course of the proposed new contract. The district spent about $246 million on teacher salaries this year." (Star Ledger)
Bob Braun is a tad annoyed by NJEA’s endorsement of Sen. Cory Booker.
Rishawn Biddle of Dropout Nation drills down on AFT's political lobbying spending here and here, including $50,000 to help Newark Mayor Ras Baraka beat Shavar Jeffries. Lots of information, including the fact that over the last three years AFT has borrowed $317 million to finance its operations, its aggressive efforts to recruit new members outside the teaching profession, and the salaries of its top officials. Randi Weingarten, for example, earned $557,875 in 2013-2014.
"Victoria Pagonis is an education policy expert with more than 30 years of experience. Her education consulting company provides workshops and trainings for educators on how to implement the Common Core Standards."
ReplyDeleteJust another 'disinterested observer', eh?
More wisdom from Ms. Pagonis:
ReplyDelete"With 47 states and territories adopting the Standards, it only made sense to administer these new tests online."
You mean like the SAT and ACT?